Dawn Shows Work Is Necessary to Happiness

After hitting the sales charts with Pollyanna in 1913 and Pollyanna Grows Up in 1915, Eleanor H. Porter repeated her feat in 1919 with Dawn, a novel that’s better than either of them.

As the story opens, young Dan Burton learns the man who mends toys for neighborhood kids has gone blind. Dan immediately decides his blurred vision means he’s going blind, too.

It turns out Dan is right.

He undergoes several operations, none successful.

Boys Dan’s age are being sent to the trenches of France. Dan’s father seeks to avoid seeing anything that’s unpleasant, including the son who can’t go to war.

Susan, the Burton’s maid-of-all-work forces Dan to accept his blindness as a challenge. When the wounded start being sent home, Dan finds he can be useful to others who have lost their sight, which was often associated with facial disfigurement common in WWI trench warfare.

There’s none of the upbeat sentimentality of the Pollyanna books in Dawn.Dawn‘s characters accept reality or hide from it, but they don’t attempt to sugar coat it.

Dawn is moderately entertaining as a novel, but more intriguing as artifact of an author working to master her craft. Alert readers will see echoes of other novelists’ works — they’re the off-key notes in Porter’s melodies.

Subscribe to reviews

Categorized reviews

These reviews are copyrighted

Please don't copy my work for any purpose, commercial or non-commercial, without prior permission. That would make it difficult for me to realize my dream—and get you into serious copyright problems.

I am, however, usually very happy to give literacy organizations (such as libraries, schools, newspapers, Literacy Volunteers of America) and independent bookstores permission to use the reviews on their websites. It's just a matter of asking nicely before you go ahead and do it.